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Home » Canadian-ism (s), The Saturday Series

Aboriginal Perspectives (9/10)

Written by on April 12, 2008 – 9:40 pm16 Comments | 364 Read this

It’s always impor­tant to remem­ber that when the French and the Eng­lish set­tled in Canada, they were not alone. The land was inhab­ited.
first

Abo­rig­i­nal peo­ple in Canada are rec­og­nized in the Cana­dian Con­sti­tu­tion respec­tively as Indi­ans, Metis, and Inuit.

  • The Indi­ans (or First Nations) live through­out most of Canada. There are 614 First Nations com­mu­ni­ties, most of them in British Colum­bia, Ontario, Man­i­toba and Saskatchewan.
  • The Métis (1% of the Cana­dian pop­u­la­tion) are descen­dants of mar­riages of Cree, Ojib­way, Saul­teaux, and Menom­i­nee to French Cana­di­ans, Scots and Eng­lish (“métis” means “mixed” in French). They live in British Colum­bia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Man­i­toba, and Ontario, and in the the North­west Territories.
  • The Inu­its (about 150 000 peo­ple) live through­out most of the Cana­dian Arc­tic and sub­arc­tic: in Nunavut (“our land”); in North­ern Que­bec, Nunavik (“place to live”); in Labrador in Nunatsi­avut (“Our Beau­ti­ful Land”); and in the North­west Ter­ri­to­ries (Arc­tic Ocean and Yukon).

The course of Abo­rig­i­nal his­tory has been deeply altered since the set­tlers came to Canada. Indeed, the laws (like the Indian Act) they imposed would affect the rela­tion­ship between the two parts.

When the Euro­peans arrived, they brought their own way of life and meth­ods to a land that Abo­rig­i­nals had owned for ever. How­ever, after an ini­tial period of wars and con­flicts, treaties were signed and the rela­tion­ship sta­bi­lized around the 18th cen­tury. But between 1763 and 1791, two acts would call for land ces­sion nego­ti­a­tions. For the first time, the Abo­rig­i­nal were expected to give up their rights to the land in order for large-scale colo­nial set­tle­ment to take place. Even­tu­ally, the bal­ance of power began to shift as the British con­sol­i­dated their empire and that gave way to a pol­icy of assim­i­la­tion of Abo­rig­i­nals — as well as the atti­tude that they were not equal to British, but subjects.

Through­out the years, the fed­eral gov­ern­ment con­tin­ued to pur­sue a pol­icy of assim­i­la­tion of Abo­rig­i­nals. A dark page in Cana­dian his­tory was when the gov­ern­ment started plac­ing Abo­rig­i­nal chil­dren into West­ern Cana­dian res­i­den­tial schools dur­ing the late 1800s. Many Natives resisted with these moves to destroy their culture.

When Canada signed the Dec­la­ra­tion of Human Rights in 1948, it was forced to re-examine its treat­ment of Abo­rig­i­nals for the first time. Abo­rig­i­nal civil rights became an ongo­ing con­cern in the 1970s, and they would make sig­nif­i­cant gains dur­ing this period. For exam­ple, the ter­ri­tory of Nunavut was cre­ated in 1999 fol­low­ing land claim.

Abo­rig­i­nal peo­ple still face a num­ber of issue in today’s Canada. A very high unem­ploy­ment rate, sub­stance abuse, crime, vio­lence are not to be under­es­ti­mated. Meanwhile,there are also claim to receive inad­e­quate fund­ing for edu­ca­tion, and allege their rights have been overlooked.

Canada has now adopted some of the Inuit cul­ture as a national iden­tity: sym­bols are used (such as the inuk­shuk for the 2010 Van­cou­ver Olympic Games), Inuit and First Nations’ art is dis­played in the best gal­leries through­out the coun­try and orga­ni­za­tions pro­mote and defend Abo­rig­i­nals’ rights. The cul­ture is still alive… and vibrant.

Related arti­cles:

  1. National Abo­rig­i­nal Day
  2. Arriv­ing In Canada With The Per­ma­nent Res­i­dence (7÷10)
  3. A Cana­dian Mind­set (8÷10)
  4. 10 Facts About Canadians
  5. Use­ful Links For Immi­gra­tion (10÷10)

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16 Comments »

  • Spyder says:

    Mi-gwetch Zhu! I am Metis: Ojib­way & French Cana­dian (mother) & white American/USA (father).

    Spyder’s last blog post..Bass Lessons For Politicians

  • barbara says:

    Salut Zhu,

    May all North Amer­i­cans never for­get who are the real Canadians.All who fol­lowed are just walk­ing on their footsteps.

    I have no blood ties to the native North Amer­i­cans, but as a US cit­i­zen, I feel ashamed and sad when I see how my coun­try treats it’s Native Amer­i­can population.

    Really cool pic­tures, Zhu ;)

    Have a great Sunday.

    barbara’s last blog post..Just more expat things… in a meme

  • Hello Zhu,

    This is such a won­der­ful post, i really loved it!

    Canada did it in 1999 and Aus­tralia, through Prime Min­is­ter Kevin Rudd had apol­o­gized sev­eral weeks ago in behalf of all Aus­tralians for their treat­ment of abo­rig­i­nals begin­ning in 1910 with their pol­icy of assim­i­la­tion that lasted until late 1970’s. This was referred to as “the lost gen­er­a­tion” where chil­dren were taken from par­ents to live with white families.

    This pol­icy resulted in abuses, untold suf­fer­ing, dis­lo­ca­tion, cul­tural dam­age, loss of iden­tity, among oth­ers. The effect is the same such as drug abuse, unem­ploy­ment, lack of edu­ca­tion, etc. Aus­tralia has rec­og­nized the rights of abo­rig­i­nals and are poised to cor­rect their mar­gin­al­iza­tion in terms of social and eco­nomic benefits.I did a post on the Aus­tralian apol­ogy the day it was made.

    I am also fol­low­ing up on the plight of the Native Amer­i­cans. The most out­spo­ken leader is Rus­sel Means, and I have been in touch with him and his group to pro­vide what­ever sup­port we can give. Money is dif­fi­cult, but even in Amer­ica, they are largely ignored.

    People’s rights are vio­lated all over the world. In my own coun­try, we have been work­ing with our abo­rig­i­nals and have made laws to pro­tect their lands and way of life, but a huge need still exists.Benefits to those who would want to get an edu­ca­tion are given for free. Liveli­hood and main­stream­ing of their pro­duce are efforts that continue.

    These things are close to the core of my inter­est, hence Tibet. But we have also geared our efforts to those in the coun­try and are under­tak­ing other activ­i­ties in other Asian, Mid­dle East and African nations through UN engage­ments and with the EU.

    There is much to learn from them and the way they pre­serve the eco­log­i­cal bal­ance. Tech­nol­ogy we refer to is often based on the mass pro­duc­tion men­tal­ity of an input-output think­ing, which leads to more prob­lems than solutions.

    Great effort! Con­grat­u­la­tions for rec­og­niz­ing this blight in the his­tory of the world. :-) –Durano, done!

    durano lawayan’s last blog post..The Risk of Rumors in Rice Reserves

  • Seraphine says:

    Thank you Zhu for the his­tory les­son.
    Human– and civil-rights for every­one
    is a won­der­ful goal. By hon­or­ing the
    past, we make a bet­ter future for all
    of us. It’s said his­tory repeats itself.
    I think there is room for improvement.

    Seraphine’s last blog post..The Wait­ing Game

  • kyh says:

    We should trea­sure the natives and help their cul­tures to thrive. How­ever in my coun­try, the natives were given too much help at the expense of the immi­grants’ (Chi­nese and Indi­ans) rights. Sigh…

    kyh’s last blog post..In the midst of…

1 Pingbacks »

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